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The Bucks officially re-signed Tony Snell to a four-year, $46 million deal on Monday.

"Tony was an integral part of our team’s improvement last season and we’re excited to re-sign him," said General Manager Jon Horst. "He is a tireless worker, a terrific teammate and a man of great character. We look forward to having him back with the Bucks as we continue to build toward a championship." Snell should retain his spot in the starting five with the Bucks next season, but he's really nothing more than a 3-point specialist in deep leagues. Jul 31 - 6:37 PM

The Bucks have agreed to re-sign Tony Snell to a four-year, $46 million deal.

Snell was a restricted free agent, but the Bucks didn't waste any time re-signing the 3-and-D wing. The deal is guaranteed for $44 million and the fourth year is a player option, but it's a bold move for a guy with career averages of 6.2 points per game. To be fair, he did improve a ton following his move to the Bucks last season, averaging career-highs in points (8.5), 3-pointers (1.8), assists (1.2), steals (0.7) and 3-point percentage (40.6 percent). Jul 1 - 12:05 AM

Milwaukee is expected to re-sign Tony Snell "for something in the $10-12 million range," according to ESPN's Zach Lowe.

Snell enjoyed a career year with the Bucks last season. He started 80 games for Milwaukee, supplied solid perimeter defense, and averaged career-highs in points (8.5), 3-pointers (1.8), and 3-point percentage (40.6). He also played well in the postseason, knocking down 51.6 percent of his 3-point attempts in the playoffs. Jun 30 - 11:43 AM

The Bucks have extended a qualifying offer to Tony Snell, making him a restricted free agent.

After a rough few years in Chicago, Snell improved a lot with the Bucks and averaged career-highs in points (8.5), 3-pointers (1.8), assists (1.2) and steals (0.7). He was one of Milwaukee's top perimeter defenders and shot 40.6 percent from beyond the arc, so he should have a decent market as a 3-and-D wing. If he stays in Milwaukee, he will likely only be relevant in deeper fantasy formats. Jun 29 - 11:21 AM

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The Bucks have agreed to re-sign Tony Snell to a four-year, $46 million deal.

Snell was a restricted free agent, but the Bucks didn't waste any time re-signing the 3-and-D wing. The deal is guaranteed for $44 million and the fourth year is a player option, but it's a bold move for a guy with career averages of 6.2 points per game. To be fair, he did improve a ton following his move to the Bucks last season, averaging career-highs in points (8.5), 3-pointers (1.8), assists (1.2), steals (0.7) and 3-point percentage (40.6 percent).

Milwaukee is expected to re-sign Tony Snell "for something in the $10-12 million range," according to ESPN's Zach Lowe.

Snell enjoyed a career year with the Bucks last season. He started 80 games for Milwaukee, supplied solid perimeter defense, and averaged career-highs in points (8.5), 3-pointers (1.8), and 3-point percentage (40.6). He also played well in the postseason, knocking down 51.6 percent of his 3-point attempts in the playoffs.

The Bucks have extended a qualifying offer to Tony Snell, making him a restricted free agent.

After a rough few years in Chicago, Snell improved a lot with the Bucks and averaged career-highs in points (8.5), 3-pointers (1.8), assists (1.2) and steals (0.7). He was one of Milwaukee's top perimeter defenders and shot 40.6 percent from beyond the arc, so he should have a decent market as a 3-and-D wing. If he stays in Milwaukee, he will likely only be relevant in deeper fantasy formats.

Milwaukee general manager John Hammond said Thursday that the Bucks are hoping to retain restricted free agent Tony Snell.

Snell started 80 games for Milwaukee this past season and averaged career-highs in points (8.5), 3-pointers (1.8), assists (1.2) and steals (0.7). "He's an outstanding guy and a guy we want to have as part of our team moving forward," Hammond said of Snell. "He's about the right things. I think Tony wants to be here. We're hoping to bring him back. We're planning on him being with us next season."

"At the beginning of the season, Tony said he wanted to be a 3 and D guy," Brogdon said. "He wanted to shoot 3s really well and play defense really well, locking up people. And he’s taken that to heart. He’s playing at a high level defensively.’’ Snell has been an X-factor in the series against Toronto, averaging 12.3 points, 3.0 boards, 1.3 assists and 3.3 triples while shooting 51.4 percent from the field. He's also peaking at the perfect time, as he's set to hit the market as a restricted free agent this summer.

Tony Snell scored a playoff career-high 19 points with four rebounds, one turnover and five 3-pointers in 38 minutes against the Raptors during the Game 4 loss.

The Bulls may want him back after the game Michael Carter-Williams had on Friday. The Bucks were getting him plenty of good looks with some off-ball screens, but that probably won't happen again in this series. Snell was averaging 10.0 points per game in his previous three games, so that serves as a fair expectation in Game 5.

Tony Snell looked great in Game 2 vs. the Raptors on Tuesday with 14 points, two boards and four triples in 31 minutes.

He finished 5-of-7 from the field and is now averaging 12.5 points, 3.0 boards, 1.5 assists and 3.5 3-pointers through the first two games of this series. With both the Bucks and Raptors using mostly small-ball lineups, Snell has been a huge key in this series so far and he's worth a glance if you need a punt play in DFS. Malcolm Brogdon added seven points, four rebounds, three assists, one block and a triple, while Matthew Dellavedova finished with seven points, three rebounds, one assist and one triple.

Rashad Vaughn could be moving into the starting five tonight with Milwaukee resting most of their main guys, so he might be someone to consider as a punt play in daily leagues tonight. Jason Terry should also see an uptick in minutes, but with 14 games on the slate, there should be better options out there than JET.

Tony Snell (rest) is listed as out for Wednesday's game against the Celtics.

Jason Kidd might be resting his stars for Wednesday's regular-season finale, which could result in big minutes for guys like Malcolm Brogdon, Rashad Vaughn, Mirza Teletovic and Michael Beasley. Check back after Wednesday morning's shootaround for official confirmation on Snell, Giannis Antetokounmpo and Khris Middleton.

Tony Snell followed up Monday's outburst with a mere three points on 1-of-6 shooting, one rebound, and no other stats in 34 minutes.

Snell scored a career-high 26 points vs. Charlotte on Tuesday, and this was the opposite end of the spectrum from the typically subdued swingman. He's not the worst option as a source of 3-pointers and steals, but Tuesday's game was an obvious fluke.

Tony Snell got hot on Tuesday and hit 10-of-14 shots and four 3-pointers for a career-high 26 points, three rebounds and one assist in 31 minutes of Tuesday's 118-108 win over the Hornets.

Snell finally put it all together tonight, but was still lacking in categories other than scoring. He's been a good source of 3-pointers and has scored in double figures in nine of his last 13 games. But unless you're simply desperate for 3-pointers, he's not someone we'd target in most instances. Prior to tonight's game, Snell was averaging just 9.7 points, 3.2 rebounds 1.0 steals and 1.9 3 points in 30 minutes a game for the Bucks in March, without a blocked shot and just 1.4 assists per game.

Tony Snell posted 10 points with a pair of 3-pointers in Monday's loss against the Grizzlies.

It was an ugly game for the Bucks, who were trucked on the banks of the Mississippi River, but Snell was solid. He has posted five straight games with 10 or more points, averaging 14.0 points, 4.8 rebounds and 1.8 steals per game during the impressive span. Snell is worth scooping up in all deeper fantasy leagues and he has been a nice mid-tier DFS play as of late.

The Wolves reportedly have a "tepid interest" in acquiring Tony Snell at the deadline.

Wolves head coach Tom Thibodeau coached Snell when he was in Chicago and it's no secret that Minnesota could use some help on the wings with Zach LaVine (knee) out for the season and Lance Stephenson's 10-day contract off the books. It's not crazy to think that Snell could start on the Wolves next to Andrew Wiggins, but this report is firmly in the rumor stage and Snell doesn't have much upside anyways. He's not worth stashing right now.

Jabari Parker (left knee) said that he can do "everything right now," and he plans to be back on the court by February.

Parker is currently recovering from a torn ACL in his left knee, which is the same ACL that he ruptured back in 2014. While he may be able to get back on the court sometime after the All-Star break, he'll assuredly be eased back into things by Milwaukee with back-to-back sets being out of the question. In other words, it's unlikely he'll be able to help you that much in fantasy hoops this season, so we'd recommend avoiding him in re-draft formats.